Peterson Institute for International Economics
The Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE) is an independent nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization dedicated to strengthening prosperity and human welfare in the global economy through expert analysis and practical policy solutions.
The Institute is committed to rigorous, intellectually open, and in-depth study and discussion. It attempts to anticipate emerging issues and present ideas in useful, accessible formats, to inform and shape public debate. Its audience includes government officials and legislators, business and labor leaders, management and staff at international organizations, university-based scholars and their students, experts at other research institutions and nongovernmental organizations, the media, and the public at large.

Michael Clemens on immigration and the US economy: PIIE Insider LIVE highlights

Michael Clemens on immigration and the US economy

Mary E. Lovely on trade deal and supply chain movement prospects in an uncertain policy environment

Chad Bown explains what tariffs mean for consumers: PIIE Insider LIVE highlights

Trump’s tariffs will harm the US and global economy, Lawrence H. Summers says

Chad Bown on tariffs, tracking trade wars, and the future of global trade

Jacob Funk Kirkegaard on Europe’s rearmament and “two front challenge”

Chad P. Bown on the difference between Trump 1.0 and 2.0 trade policy

Inflation is coming in the US, whatever the growth rate, says Adam S. Posen

US policy shocks and rising uncertainty weaken US and global economic outlook, says Karen Dynan

The Business Briefing: Adam S. Posen on Trump’s tariffs

Elina Ribakova on economic statecraft and the Russia-Ukraine war: PIIE Insider LIVE highlights

207. What happened on Trump’s tariff day

Mary E. Lovely on the economic impact of Trump’s auto tariffs

Cecilia Malmström on the EU's new era of trade and geopolitics: PIIE Insider LIVE highlights

206. Paul Krugman talks trade, industrial policy, and Trump

205. Trump's Ukraine minerals deal and China

202. Trump's steel and aluminum tariffs are back

201. Trade Talks is back. And so is President Trump.

200. Has the USMCA improved working conditions in Mexico?

And that is all for Trade Talks

199. How trade economists busted corruption at the port

198. Inside Washington’s lobbying industry

197. Moving workers across Europe

196. How multinationals avoid taxes through technology licensing

195. How did Canadian workers adjust so well to US trade?

194. Industrial policy detectives: China’s subsidies for shipbuilding

193. Did multinationals enforce Bangladesh’s new labor law?

192. Will more farm trade cause more deforestation?

191. Brazil’s trade opening and its toll on workers and crime